Handyman Website Builder That Does the Work For You
Handyman website builder templates share an assumption: that your business fits in three service boxes. Yours does forty different jobs, and that breadth is exactly what a template cannot hold. We build handyman sites the other way around, generated from your Google Business Profile, one page per service, live in minutes.
The forty-jobs problem
A handyman site has to explain more than most. Drywall patching, TV mounting, gutter cleaning, fence repair, faucet swaps: nobody types the word handyman when their deck rail comes loose, they type the job. Winning those searches takes a page per job, and no one hand-builds forty pages in a template editor after work. Our builder generates the service pages from what your Google Business Profile already lists, so the site catches the specific searches instead of only your name.
Breadth also makes trust harder. A roofer does one thing; a handyman asks a stranger to believe he can do forty things well. The site carries that load with reviews pulled from your Google profile, where a customer can verify them, and photos of your actual work instead of stock images of a smiling model with a toolbelt.
What $75 a month replaces
For a solo operator, every recurring cost has to earn its keep, so here is the whole bill. $75/mo, all in covers design, build, hosting, a branded domain, lead capture, analytics, and plain-English edit requests with draft approval and instant rollback. That replaces a $12 to $25 a month builder subscription plus your evenings, or a $500 to $3,000 freelancer plus hosting, or an agency you were never going to hire anyway. One small job a month covers it, and the leads land in your dashboard without being resold or shared with anyone.
If you would rather build it yourself
Some handymen genuinely enjoy this work, and if that is you, do it and keep the money. Handyman Startup's guide to building your own site is written by a handyman and does not sugarcoat the hours. The trade-off is plain: DIY costs less cash and more evenings. Ours costs $75 and none of your time.
A handyman does forty kinds of work. A template gives you three boxes and a stock photo. That mismatch is why most handyman sites read like nobody works there.
Every site we generate is bespoke code, not a shared template, same as every trade on our contractor website builder page. And handyman website design shows how the layout handles job breadth, trust marks, and a lead form that asks three things, not eleven.
FAQ
What is the best website builder for handyman services?
For a handyman who wants to do the building, Wix or a similar template tool is the usual answer. For a handyman who wants the site done, priced flat, and handled after launch, that is us: paste your Google Business Profile and review the draft in minutes.
Should a handyman have a website?
Yes, once you want work beyond referrals. Your Google Business Profile mostly ranks for your name; a site catches the job searches. Longer answer: should a handyman have a website.
What is the average cost to pay someone to build a website?
Freelancers typically run $500 to $3,000 and agencies $5,000 and up, both before hosting and edits. Subscription services like ours run $75 a month with everything included.